$ oc new-app /path/to/source/code
You can create a new OpenShift Dedicated application from components including source or binary code, images and/or templates by using either the OpenShift CLI or web console.
The new-app
command allows you to create applications from source code in a
local or remote Git repository.
To create an application using a Git repository in a local directory:
$ oc new-app /path/to/source/code
If using a local Git repository, the repository should have a remote named
origin that points to a URL accessible by the OpenShift Dedicated cluster. If
there is no recognised remote, |
To create an application using a remote Git repository:
$ oc new-app https://github.com/sclorg/cakephp-ex
To create an application using a private remote Git repository:
$ oc new-app https://github.com/youruser/yourprivaterepo --source-secret=yoursecret
If using a private remote Git repository, you can use the |
You can use a subdirectory of your source code repository by specifying a
--context-dir
flag. To create an application using a remote Git repository and a context subdirectory:
$ oc new-app https://github.com/sclorg/s2i-ruby-container.git \ --context-dir=2.0/test/puma-test-app
Also, when specifying a remote URL, you can specify a Git branch to use by
appending #<branch_name>
to the end of the URL:
$ oc new-app https://github.com/openshift/ruby-hello-world.git#beta4
The new-app
command creates a build configuration, which itself creates a new application
image
from your source code. The new-app
command typically also creates a
deployment
configuration to deploy the new image, and a
service to
provide load-balanced access to the deployment running your image.
OpenShift Dedicated automatically detects whether the
Docker
,
Pipeline
or Source
build
strategy should be used, and in the case of Source
builds,
detects an appropriate language builder image.
Build Strategy Detection
If a Jenkinsfile exists in the root or specified context directory of the
source repository when creating a new application, OpenShift Dedicated generates a
Pipeline
build strategy.
Otherwise, if a Dockerfile is found, OpenShift Dedicated
generates a
Docker
build strategy.
Otherwise, it generates a
Source
build strategy.
You can override the build strategy by setting the --strategy
flag to either
docker
,
pipeline
or source
.
$ oc new-app /home/user/code/myapp --strategy=docker
The |
Language Detection
If using the Source
build strategy, new-app
attempts to determine the
language builder to use by the presence of certain files in the root or
specified context directory of the repository:
Language | Files |
---|---|
|
project.json, *.csproj |
|
pom.xml |
|
app.json, package.json |
|
cpanfile, index.pl |
|
composer.json, index.php |
|
requirements.txt, setup.py |
|
Gemfile, Rakefile, config.ru |
|
build.sbt |
|
Godeps, main.go |
After a language is detected, new-app
searches the OpenShift Dedicated server for
image
stream tags that have a supports
annotation matching the detected language,
or an image stream that matches the name of the detected language. If a match is
not found, new-app
searches the Docker Hub
registry for an image that matches the detected language based on name.
You can override the image the builder uses for a particular source repository
by specifying the image (either an image stream or container specification) and
the repository, with a ~
as a separator. Note that if this is done,
build strategy detection and
language detection are not carried out.
For example, to use the myproject/my-ruby image stream with the source in a remote repository:
$ oc new-app myproject/my-ruby~https://github.com/openshift/ruby-hello-world.git
To use the openshift/ruby-20-centos7:latest container image stream with the source in a local repository:
$ oc new-app openshift/ruby-20-centos7:latest~/home/user/code/my-ruby-app
Language detection requires the Git client to be locally installed so that your
repository can be cloned and inspected. If Git is not available, you can avoid
the language detection step by specifying the builder image to use with your
repository with the Using the Similarly using the |
You can deploy an application from an existing image. Images can come from image streams in the OpenShift Dedicated server, images in a specific registry or Docker Hub registry, or images in the local Docker server.
The new-app
command attempts to determine the type of image specified in the
arguments passed to it. However, you can explicitly tell new-app
whether the
image is a container image (using the --docker-image
argument) or an image stream
(using the -i|--image
argument).
If you specify an image from your local Docker repository, you must ensure that the same image is available to the OpenShift Dedicated cluster nodes. |
For example, to create an application from the DockerHub MySQL image:
$ oc new-app mysql
To create an application using an image in a private registry, specify the full container image specification:
$ oc new-app myregistry:5000/example/myimage
If the registry containing the image is not
secured with SSL,
cluster administrators must ensure that the Docker daemon on the OpenShift Dedicated
node hosts is run with the |
You can create an application from an existing image stream and optional image stream tag:
$ oc new-app my-stream:v1
You can create an application from a previously stored template or from a template file, by specifying the name of the template as an argument. For example, you can store a sample application template and use it to create an application.
To create an application from a stored template:
$ oc create -f examples/sample-app/application-template-stibuild.json $ oc new-app ruby-helloworld-sample
To directly use a template in your local file system, without first storing it
in OpenShift Dedicated, use the -f|--file
argument:
$ oc new-app -f examples/sample-app/application-template-stibuild.json
Template Parameters
When creating an application based on a template, use the
-p|--param
argument to set parameter values defined by the template:
$ oc new-app ruby-helloworld-sample \ -p ADMIN_USERNAME=admin -p ADMIN_PASSWORD=mypassword
You can store your parameters in a file, then use that file with
--param-file
when instantiating a template. If you want to read the
parameters from standard input, use --param-file=-
:
$ cat helloworld.params ADMIN_USERNAME=admin ADMIN_PASSWORD=mypassword $ oc new-app ruby-helloworld-sample --param-file=helloworld.params $ cat helloworld.params | oc new-app ruby-helloworld-sample --param-file=-
The new-app
command generates OpenShift Dedicated objects that will build, deploy, and
run the application being created. Normally, these objects are created in the
current project using names derived from the input source repositories or the
input images. However, new-app
allows you to modify this behavior.
The set of objects created by new-app
depends on the artifacts passed as
input: source repositories, images, or templates.
Object | Description |
---|---|
|
A |
|
For |
|
A |
|
The |
Other |
Other objects may be generated when instantiating templates, according to the template. |
When generating applications from a template, source, or an
image, you can use the -e|--env
argument to pass
environment variables to the application container at run time:
$ oc new-app openshift/postgresql-92-centos7 \ -e POSTGRESQL_USER=user \ -e POSTGRESQL_DATABASE=db \ -e POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD=password
The variables can also be read from file using the --env-file
argument:
$ cat postgresql.env POSTGRESQL_USER=user POSTGRESQL_DATABASE=db POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD=password $ oc new-app openshift/postgresql-92-centos7 --env-file=postgresql.env
Additionally, environment variables can be given on standard input by using
--env-file=-
:
$ cat postgresql.env | oc new-app openshift/postgresql-92-centos7 --env-file=-
See Managing Environment Variables for more information.
Any |
When generating applications from a template, source, or an
image, you can use the --build-env
argument to pass
environment variables to the build container at run time:
$ oc new-app openshift/ruby-23-centos7 \ --build-env HTTP_PROXY=http://myproxy.net:1337/ \ --build-env GEM_HOME=~/.gem
The variables can also be read from a file using the --build-env-file
argument:
$ cat ruby.env HTTP_PROXY=http://myproxy.net:1337/ GEM_HOME=~/.gem $ oc new-app openshift/ruby-23-centos7 --build-env-file=ruby.env
Additionally, environment variables can be given on standard input by using
--build-env-file=-
:
$ cat ruby.env | oc new-app openshift/ruby-23-centos7 --build-env-file=-
When generating applications from source,
images, or templates, you
can use the -l|--label
argument to add labels to the created objects. Labels
make it easy to collectively select, configure, and delete objects associated
with the application.
$ oc new-app https://github.com/openshift/ruby-hello-world -l name=hello-world
To see a dry-run of what new-app
will create, you can use the -o|--output
argument with a yaml
or json
value. You can then use the output to preview
the objects that will be created, or redirect it to a file that you can edit.
Once you are satisfied, you can use oc create
to create the OpenShift Dedicated
objects.
To output new-app
artifacts to a file, edit them, then create them:
$ oc new-app https://github.com/openshift/ruby-hello-world \ -o yaml > myapp.yaml $ vi myapp.yaml $ oc create -f myapp.yaml
Objects created by new-app
are normally named after the source repository, or
the image used to generate them. You can set the name of the objects produced by
adding a --name
flag to the command:
$ oc new-app https://github.com/openshift/ruby-hello-world --name=myapp
Normally, new-app
creates objects in the current project. However, you can
create objects in a different project that you have access to using the
-n|--namespace
argument:
$ oc new-app https://github.com/openshift/ruby-hello-world -n myproject
The new-app
command allows creating multiple applications specifying multiple
parameters to new-app
. Labels specified in the command line apply to all
objects created by the single command. Environment variables apply to all
components created from source or images.
To create an application from a source repository and a Docker Hub image:
$ oc new-app https://github.com/openshift/ruby-hello-world mysql
If a source code repository and a builder image are specified as separate
arguments, |
The new-app
command allows deploying multiple images together in a single pod.
In order to specify which images to group together, use the +
separator. The
--group
command line argument can also be used to specify the images that should
be grouped together. To group the image built from a source repository with
other images, specify its builder image in the group:
$ oc new-app ruby+mysql
To deploy an image built from source and an external image together:
$ oc new-app \ ruby~https://github.com/openshift/ruby-hello-world \ mysql \ --group=ruby+mysql
While in the desired project, click Add to Project:
Select either a builder image from the list of images in your project, or from the service catalog:
Only image stream tags that have the builder tag listed in their annotations appear in this list, as demonstrated here: |
kind: "ImageStream" apiVersion: "v1" metadata: name: "ruby" creationTimestamp: null spec: dockerImageRepository: "registry.redhat.io/openshift3/ruby-20-rhel7" tags: - name: "2.0" annotations: description: "Build and run Ruby 2.0 applications" iconClass: "icon-ruby" tags: "builder,ruby" (1) supports: "ruby:2.0,ruby" version: "2.0"
1 | Including builder here ensures this ImageStreamTag appears in the
web console as a builder. |
Modify the settings in the new application screen to configure the objects to support your application: